Data requires more space on SSD vs regular HD?

Hi guys,
I guess this is a general question on SSDs.
I just installed a 256 GB Crucial M4 in my 2010 mac mini. I transferred the old data onto the new drive and there was a big discrepancy (almost 11 GB) in the used space between the two drives.

I then reformatted the old HD and cloned the new SSD on it. Same 11GB difference in used space. Am I doing something wrong or is this normal for SSD drives?

As far as the SSD controller, is there a way to check or change its settings?

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No, unfortunately you can't see or influence what the SSD controller does. Every controller handles compression, garbage collection and other features differently, so it's impossible to say what exactly your controller does (well, you could probably google it, but you probably won't find exact numbers).

Its not the compression, its potentially the wear levelling algorithm. In order to ensure the drive does not become saturated (leaving the controller with few options for swapping out dead NAND chips, etc), a reserve is managed by the controller.

However the scenario you talk about could be any number of things, but without more info its not easy to tell.

PS I'm doing a TX from a 120GB Intel SSD to a 256GB Samsung one tonight so if I notice anything odd I'll be sure to post back!

The problem (?) is getting worse by the day. Now, the difference is over 15GB between my SSD and my nightly clone. At this rate I will run out of space within a few weeks. And I still have no idea what's causing this or if this is normal.

Does anyone here clone their SSD drives for backup on regular spinning HDs and can confirm they are seeing the same thing?

The problem (?) is getting worse by the day. Now, the difference is over 15GB between my SSD and my nightly clone. At this rate I will run out of space within a few weeks. And I still have no idea what's causing this or if this is normal.

Does anyone here clone their SSD drives for backup on regular spinning HDs and can confirm they are seeing the same thing?

Click to expand...

I think I know what's happening ("nightly clone" was the hint):

Apple assumes that you are using Time Machine. So you don't clone your hard drive (make an identical copy), but use Time Machine to backup whatever is changed. That has the advantage that if you delete a file by mistake and find out next month, you can go to your Time Machine backup, go back a month, and get the file back.

If you don't make regular Time Machine backups, Time Machine will make these backups on your computer's drive - as long as there is space. Of course the used space goes down, but if your drive gets full, Time Machine backups will be removed automatically.

You could either use Time Machine for backups instead of cloning your hard drive, in which case the space used for Time Machine on your hard drive is recovered. Or you turn Time Machine off.

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